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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Retooling Sheryl Sandberg’s “Lean In” principle



Do you remember the 1975 Helen Reddy hit song stating “I am woman, hear me roar”, or the 1980’s commercial for Enjoli fragrance that featured a business suited woman holding a frying pan and singing “I bring home the bacon and fry it up in a pan”? Well, perhaps I am dating myself here, but my point is that for nearly 4, and closer to 5 decades - if you consider Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique and Gloria Steinem’s activism - the subject of women’s station in society and their demands for gender equality in education, in the workforce, in politics and in pay have been a topic of heated conversation and controversy. Now comes the recently released book titled Lean In, by the very accomplished and leadership positioned Sheryl Sandberg. Is any of what she tells us new? Not really. We have been debating the issue of women’s self-empowerment for quite some time; and for all the challenges they have encountered women have made great strides and are, in increasing numbers, taking on leadership positions from serving in the armed forces to running large corporations and holding political office.

However, self-empowerment cannot thrive in an uncooperatively barren global social landscape, because the challenges women face, either in the work force, their personal lives or from repressive political climates do not provide the supportive net that can bring about change. Let us take the case of Regina Agyare from Ghana. Although Regina held a coveted IT job with a prestigious bank where she developed a highly acclaimed automated customer friendly process, she was the youngest and only female at the institution and was regularly passed over for promotion. Regina was being discriminated against simply because of her age and gender. It took Regina 4 years, and as she puts it “a lot of sleepless nights”, to take the path that more and more young women are pursuing: becoming an entrepreneur. She is now paying it forward by developing technologies that are successfully utilized in other developing nations.  

Regina’s story is inspiring, yet she grappled alone with how her decision would impact her professional life. She probably would have benefited from being able to turn to a network of professional women for guidance, support and mentoring. In New York, there is just such an initiative, which has grown in global outreach over the short time since its inception. It is the International Women’s Entrepreneurial Challenge (IWEC) http://www.iwecawards.com, established in 2006 as an initiative of the Barcelona Chamber of Commerce, in partnership with the Chamber of Commerce of Manhattan (New York) and FICCI/FLO (the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry Ladies Organization) and supported by the US Department of State. Since inception, IWEC has added collaborative partnerships with South Africa, Central Asia, and Peru. Above all else, IWEC’s mission addresses precisely the issue of women’s professional self-empowerment but within a global collective and collaborative support network of same minded women.

So, to Sheryl Sandberg, Tina Brown, Hillary Clinton, Kirsten Gillebrand, Christine Quinn and the many powerful women who recently gathered at the Women in the World Summit, I agree and applaud your recognition of women as agents of change; however, self-empowerment can only happen if empowered women open the door for their sisters to walk through. It is up to all of us to deliver change.

Check out this most recent and disturbing statistic: http://www.crainsnewyork.com/article/20130409/BLOGS02/130409878?template=mobile

Monday, April 1, 2013

Ageism in a Time of Crisis!?

The heading is both a statement and a question, as I have increasingly been stumped by what I perceive to be hiring practices by non-profit organizations focused on the momentary bottom line rather than on the long range potential for increased revenue.

What, you may ask, does this have to do with "ageism"?

Whether you see it or not, there is a definite link between choosing to hire individuals at the early stages of their career - therefore young and still gaining experience - and the pay scale institutions are willing to offer, all the while requiring and expecting these hires to perform at senior level experience. In very few professional fields do experience, and the attributes of credibility, socio-cultural diplomacy and psychological intuition carry  more weight than in fund raising; and they get honed over many years of rejections, misses and successes, of time spent in the trenches, with sleeves rolled up stuffing envelopes, and celebratory moments for hard won achievements.

Non-profit Boards, search committees and HR directors who truly understand what it is they are seeking to accomplish for their organizations, are not only willing but even excited to commit the money and time needed to bring on board to occupy the leadership role individuals that have a strategic understanding, combined with the experience and depth of knowledge of fund raising best practices. These individuals are, most likely, of the baby-boomer generation; and because they have years - oftentimes more than one decade - of experience under their belts, the pay scale where they're positioned is obviously much higher, leading to being passed over in hiring for ED or Director positions by short-sighted decision makers. However, no one admits to this form of discrimination, using as feedback the generic "it was not the right fit."  Unfortunately for the the organizations, neither is the inexperienced fund raiser who was thrown in a senior position. Both parties soon find out that despite the non-profit's money saving hiring strategy, their partnership "was not a good fit."

My mother always said:  You get what you pay for...